So my daughter Vicki, who was under a year old when Nemesis came out, has indicated she'd like to see the Star Trek movie. Apparently it's getting word of mouth at the elementary school.
She's seven so I'm a little nervous about the appropriateness of the film for her (though she has survived seeing Revenge of the Sith which also worried me). As a compromise I told her we should probably watch some of the DVDs first. She wanted to see "the first one" first. Having no desire to show her TMP (I saw it around that age now that I think about it) we watched "Enterprise: Broken Bow" together. She really enjoyed it and was totally into Hoshi.
We then moved onto Star Trek II - I figured that if she can handle that most of the new movie should be ok. And watching that I get a little better some of the criticisms of the new movie. To be honest, I still really like the new film, but I'll definitely have to put Khan as the pinnacle of the film franchise.
How come? First of all, I'd forgotten how awesome the acting was. Shatner by Star Trek V thru VII had become, in my opinion, a caricature of himself. But man, in Star Trek II his delivery as an older Kirk was spot on. An absolutely amazing film. And seeing it again for the first time in years made me realize just how integral the Kobayashi Maru scenario was to the whole film. The movie opens with Saavik getting her ass handed to her.
Fast forward to the battle against Reliant. Enterprise gets a similar ass-kicking. But Kirk "cheats" to survive. (To quote later in the movie "I cheated in the face of death and patted myself in the back for my ingenuity"). The rest of the movie is essentially Kirk and Spock playing out a real Kobayashi Maru scenario. The two of them challenge every "rule" there is. Take over the opponent's control systems to lower shields. Trick your enemy over an open channel. Crippled as you are, run into a nebula where both you and your enemy will be blind. March right into a radiation-contaminated room to fix your ship, depositing your soul within one of your best friends for good measure.
The whole thing was genius. And I never fully took in how integral the Kobayashi Maru "no-win" scenario was integral to the film. Something I think the new movie fell short of. I approve of Kirk still cheating on the exam, showing his lack of belief in a no-win scenario. But Star Trek II reinforced that belief throughout the entire film. I think that is where XI fell short. I never quite got the feeling that Kirk was scraping by, pulling every imaginable trick out of his hat to survive against impossible odds. He was more the beneficiary of Spock-Prime - which in a way is ok, as this movie was almost as much a Spock piece as a Kirk piece. But given that I wonder if the Kobayashi Maru scenario was inappropriate in the confines of this film.
That said, I did catch an interesting Star Trek II reference in XI from my rewatching of Khan. Recall that in XI Kirk is munching on an apple when taking the exam for the third time. In II, after he explains how he cheated to Saavik, he takes a bite out of an apple just before beaming back to Enterprise.